Mutually Unbiased Balanced Functions & Generalized Random Access Codes
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2105.03932v1
- Date: Sun, 9 May 2021 13:17:24 GMT
- Title: Mutually Unbiased Balanced Functions & Generalized Random Access Codes
- Authors: Vaisakh M, Ram krishna Patra, Mukta Janpandit, Samrat Sen, Anubhav
Chaturvedi, and Manik Banik
- Abstract summary: Random Access Codes (RACs) are cryptographically significant family of bipartite communication tasks.
We introduce a generalization of this task wherein the receiver aims to retrieve randomly chosen functions of sender's input string.
We investigate and bound the performance of classical, (ii.) quantum prepare and measure, and (iii.) entanglement assisted classical communication (EACC) protocols for the resultant generalized RACs (GRACs)
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: Quantum resources and protocols are known to outperform their classical
counterparts in variety of communication and information processing tasks.
Random Access Codes (RACs) are one such cryptographically significant family of
bipartite communication tasks, wherein, the sender encodes a data set
(typically a string of input bits) onto a physical system of bounded dimension
and transmits it to the receiver, who then attempts to guess a randomly chosen
part of the sender's data set (typically one of the sender's input bits). In
this work, we introduce a generalization of this task wherein the receiver, in
addition to the individual input bits, aims to retrieve randomly chosen
functions of sender's input string. Specifically, we employ sets of mutually
unbiased balanced functions (MUBS), such that perfect knowledge of any one of
the constituent functions yields no knowledge about the others. We investigate
and bound the performance of (i.) classical, (ii.) quantum prepare and measure,
and (iii.) entanglement assisted classical communication (EACC) protocols for
the resultant generalized RACs (GRACs). Finally, we detail the case of GRACs
with three input bits, find maximal success probabilities for classical,
quantum and EACC protocols, along with the effect of noisy quantum channels on
the performance of quantum protocols. Moreover, with the help of this case
study, we reveal several characteristic properties of the GRACs which deviate
from the standard RACs.
Related papers
- Scalable & Noise-Robust Communication Advantage of Multipartite Quantum Entanglement [0.0]
Quantum resources offer advantages over classical methods in addressing this challenge.
We show that when the receiver and the senders share a multi-qubit Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) state, certain global functions of the distributed inputs can be computed with only one bit of classical communication from each sender.
We also show that the entanglement-based protocol exhibits significant robustness under white noise.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-09-20T05:17:09Z) - Efficient decoding of stabilizer code by single-qubit local operations
and classical communication [2.5322020135765464]
We construct a protocol for extracting distributed one-qubit quantum information encoded in a stabilizer code of multiple qubits.
This protocol achieves efficient extraction within a time in terms of the number of physical qubits.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-08-27T09:19:59Z) - Quantum Multiple-Access One-Time Pad [9.137554315375919]
We introduce and analyze an information theoretical task that we call the quantum multiple-access one-time pad.
A number of senders initially share a correlated quantum state with a receiver and an eavesdropper.
We derive a single-letter characterization for the achievable rate region in a limit of infinitely many copies and vanishingly small error.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-08-25T11:43:24Z) - Data post-processing for the one-way heterodyne protocol under
composable finite-size security [62.997667081978825]
We study the performance of a practical continuous-variable (CV) quantum key distribution protocol.
We focus on the Gaussian-modulated coherent-state protocol with heterodyne detection in a high signal-to-noise ratio regime.
This allows us to study the performance for practical implementations of the protocol and optimize the parameters connected to the steps above.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-05-20T12:37:09Z) - Computation-aided classical-quantum multiple access to boost network
communication speeds [61.12008553173672]
We quantify achievable quantum communication rates of codes with computation property for a two-sender cq-MAC.
We show that it achieves the maximum possible communication rate (the single-user capacity), which cannot be achieved with conventional design.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-05-30T11:19:47Z) - Composably secure data processing for Gaussian-modulated continuous
variable quantum key distribution [58.720142291102135]
Continuous-variable quantum key distribution (QKD) employs the quadratures of a bosonic mode to establish a secret key between two remote parties.
We consider a protocol with homodyne detection in the general setting of composable finite-size security.
In particular, we analyze the high signal-to-noise regime which requires the use of high-rate (non-binary) low-density parity check codes.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-03-30T18:02:55Z) - Secure Two-Party Quantum Computation Over Classical Channels [63.97763079214294]
We consider the setting where the two parties (a classical Alice and a quantum Bob) can communicate only via a classical channel.
We show that it is in general impossible to realize a two-party quantum functionality with black-box simulation in the case of malicious quantum adversaries.
We provide a compiler that takes as input a classical proof of quantum knowledge (PoQK) protocol for a QMA relation R and outputs a zero-knowledge PoQK for R that can be verified by classical parties.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-10-15T17:55:31Z) - Fault-tolerant Coding for Quantum Communication [71.206200318454]
encode and decode circuits to reliably send messages over many uses of a noisy channel.
For every quantum channel $T$ and every $eps>0$ there exists a threshold $p(epsilon,T)$ for the gate error probability below which rates larger than $C-epsilon$ are fault-tolerantly achievable.
Our results are relevant in communication over large distances, and also on-chip, where distant parts of a quantum computer might need to communicate under higher levels of noise.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-09-15T15:10:50Z) - Genuine quantum networks: superposed tasks and addressing [68.8204255655161]
We show how to make quantum networks, both standard and entanglement-based, genuine quantum.
We provide them with the possibility of handling superposed tasks and superposed addressing.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-04-30T18:00:06Z) - Experimental characterisation of unsharp qubit observables and
sequential measurement incompatibility via quantum random access codes [0.0]
We report an experimental implementation of unsharp qubit measurements in a sequential communication protocol.
The protocol involves three parties; the first party prepares a qubit system, the second party performs operations which return a classical and quantum outcome, and the latter is measured by the third party.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-01-14T13:37:04Z) - Quantum Advantages in (n,d)->1 Random Access Codes [1.0485739694839669]
We first characterize optimal classical RACs, proving that the well-known classical strategy known as majority-encoding-identity-decoding is indeed optimal.
We then construct a quantum protocol by exploiting only two incompatible measurements, the minimal requirement, and show the advantages beyond the classical one.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2015-10-11T12:27:51Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.